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AKI in ICU

Drhyo 2025.11.16 22:12 Views : 19

1. Types of AKI in the ICU

A. Pre-renal (most common)

  • Septic shock

  • Volume depletion

  • Third-spacing

  • Cardiorenal syndrome

Clues: BUN:Cr > 20, FeNa < 1%, FeUrea < 35% (esp. if on diuretics)


B. Intrinsic AKI

  • ATN (ischemia, sepsis, nephrotoxins) — MOST common intrinsic

  • AIN (antibiotics, PPIs)

  • Glomerulonephritis

  • Rhabdomyolysis

  • Tumor lysis syndrome

  • Contrast nephropathy

Clues: muddy brown casts, FeNa > 2%, rising creatinine despite fluids


C. Post-renal

  • Foley obstruction

  • Ureteral obstruction (stones, tumor)

  • Prostatic obstruction

Clue: HYDRONEPHROSIS on renal ultrasound


2. Initial ICU Evaluation (FAST)

A. Examine the patient

  • Volume status: JVP, edema, lungs

  • Foley catheter patency

  • Output: oliguria = <0.5 mL/kg/hr

B. Labs

  • CMP (BUN, Cr, electrolytes)

  • ABG

  • CK (if rhabdo)

  • Urinalysis + microscopy

  • FeNa or FeUrea

  • Lactate

C. Imaging

  • Renal ultrasound (avoid CT unless needed)

D. Medications

  • Stop nephrotoxins:

    • NSAIDs

    • ACE/ARB

    • Vancomycin + Zosyn (avoid combo if possible)

    • IV contrast if avoidable

    • Aminoglycosides


🟡 3. Fluid Management (Critical in ICU)

If hypovolemic:

  • Crystalloids: balanced fluids preferred (LR, PlasmaLyte)

  • Avoid large NS boluses → hyperchloremic acidosis → worsen AKI

If fluid overloaded:

  • Diuretic trial: Furosemide 40–80 mg IV, or drip

  • Add thiazide (metolazone) if resistant

  • Consider early CRRT if:

    • Severe overload

    • Respiratory compromise

    • Inability to diurese

Golden rule:

💡 Don’t give fluids to a wet patient. Don’t give diuretics to a dry patient.


🔴 4. Electrolyte Emergencies (ICU MUST-KNOW)

A. Hyperkalemia (K > 6 or EKG changes)

1. Stabilize myocardium
✔ Calcium gluconate 1 g IV

2. Shift K intracellularly
✔ Insulin 10 units IV + D50
✔ Albuterol neb
✔ Sodium bicarb (metabolic acidosis)

3. Remove K from body
✔ Loop diuretics
✔ Lokelma / Kayexalate
Dialysis if refractory or life-threatening


B. Severe Acidosis

pH < 7.20

  • Treat cause

  • Bicarbonate drip if severe and HCO₃ < 10

  • Consider dialysis if unresponsive


C. Hyponatremia / Hypernatremia

  • Correct slowly

  • Hyponatremia: 4–6 mEq/L per 24 hrs max

  • Hypernatremia: free water (enteral or hypotonic fluids)


D. Hyperphosphatemia

  • Common in AKI

  • Use phosphate binders (sevelamer)

  • Dialysis if severe


🟢 5. Indications for Dialysis (AEIOU)

Classic ICU mnemonic:

A – Acidosis

  • pH < 7.1

  • Refractory to medical therapy

E – Electrolytes

  • Hyperkalemia > 6.5 or EKG changes

  • Refractory to therapy

I – Intoxication

  • Ethylene glycol

  • Methanol

  • Lithium

  • Salicylates

  • Valproate

  • Theophylline

O – Overload

  • Pulmonary edema unresponsive to diuretics

U – Uremia

  • Encephalopathy

  • Pericarditis

  • Bleeding due to platelet dysfunction


🔵 6. CRRT vs iHD vs SLED

A. CRRT (Continuous Renal Replacement Therapy)

Indications in ICU:

  • Hemodynamic instability

  • Severe fluid overload

  • Severe acidosis

  • Very high catabolic states

Pros: gentle, 24h, stable hemodynamics
Cons: requires ICU nursing, anticoagulation


B. Intermittent Hemodialysis (iHD)

Indications:

  • Hemodynamically stable patients

  • Standard AKI/CKD dialysis

Pros: fast solute removal
Cons: risk of hypotension


C. SLED (Slow-Low Efficiency Dialysis)

  • Hybrid between CRRT and iHD

  • Useful in borderline unstable ICU patients


🟣 7. Medication Dosing in Renal Failure

Always adjust:

  • Vancomycin

  • Zosyn

  • Meropenem (extend infusion)

  • Opioids (avoid morphine → metabolites accumulate)

  • Gabapentin

  • Metformin (avoid in AKI)

  • DOACs

  • Insulin needs decrease as renal function worsens → risk of hypoglycemia


🔥 ICU PEARLS FOR RENAL FAILURE

  • AKI in sepsis often improves after MAP > 65 and adequate perfusion

  • Over-resuscitation worsens lung function in ARDS patients

  • Vancomycin + Zosyn dramatically increases AKI risk—avoid combination if possible

  • Use urine microscopy — muddy brown casts suggest ATN

  • Start CRRT early in severe shock or severe fluid overload

  • Check daily weights, strict I/O, bladder scans

  • Remember FeUrea < 35% is reliable even when on diuretics

  • High-dose loop diuretics may cause ototoxicity (rare)

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